EUNAP 10th Edition Webinar: Cocoa & EUDR – February 19, 2026
EUDR Compliance for Nigerian Cocoa: Protecting Nigeria’s €1.5 Billion Export Market
On February 19, 2026, the EU-Nigeria Agribusiness Platform (EUNAP) convened its 10th Edition Information Webinar, bringing together 52 stakeholders from government, private sector, development finance, and research institutions to address this urgent challenge. The session delivered critical clarity on compliance pathways, funding mechanisms, and the technological solutions now available to safeguard Nigeria’s cocoa competitiveness.
Webinar Key Figures
- 52 Registered Participants
- €1.5B Annual Cocoa Export Value at Risk
- €208M EU Funding Mobilized
- Dec 31, 2026 Large Operator Compliance Deadline
The EUDR Challenge: What’s at Stake?
The EU Deforestation Regulation prohibits the importation of commodities linked to deforestation or forest degradation occurring after December 31, 2020. Seven commodities are regulated: cocoa, coffee, palm oil, soybean, rubber, cattle, and wood.
Critical Compliance Deadlines
- December 31, 2026: Large operators must be fully compliant
- June 30, 2027: SMEs and smallholder-linked exporters must comply
Consequences of Non-Compliance
- Fines up to 4% of EU buyer annual turnover
- Product confiscation at EU ports
- Permanent market exclusion
- Reputational damage across the value chain
“Our credibility depends on a unified national system. The EU assesses Nigeria as a single entity, not state by state.”
— Dr. Aisha Aliyu, Federal Ministry of Agriculture & Food Security
Key Webinar Highlights
High-Level Government Commitment
The webinar featured opening remarks from:
Federal Ministry of Agriculture & Food Security (Dr. Aisha Aliyu)
- Warned of $1 billion in direct export earnings and $3 billion in broader economic value at risk
- Emphasized the need for a centralized national traceability database
- Called for harmonized compliance across all cocoa-producing states
Federal Ministry of Industry, Trade & Investment (Mr. Oladele Oluwafemi)
- Confirmed Nigeria’s position as Africa’s fourth-largest cocoa producer
- Announced active national task force on legality harmonization
- Committed to aligning state-level export systems with EUDR requirements
EU Funding Support Confirmed
Mr. Hugh Briggs of the EU Delegation confirmed two major financial support mechanisms:
- €18 million dedicated EU-GIZ compliance support project
- €190 million mobilized through Bank of Industry (BOI) and FCMB for sector financing
These funds target:
- Farm mapping and geolocation data collection
- Digital traceability platform deployment
- Farmer awareness and training programs
- Risk assessment and due diligence systems
The Five Pillars of EUDR Compliance
Mr. Victor Ezenwa of NICERT Expert Consulting outlined the mandatory compliance framework:
1. Geolocation Mapping
- All farms must be GPS-mapped
- Farms >4 hectares require polygon mapping
- Formats: GeoJSON, KML, or Shapefile
2. Due Diligence & Risk Assessment
- Satellite and GIS-based classification
- Risk mitigation plans required
- Continuous post-cutoff monitoring
3. Legal Compliance
- Proof of legal right to cultivate
- Community head attestations accepted
- State harmonization essential
4. Farm-to-Port Traceability
- Full chain-of-custody documentation
- Prevent mixing with non-compliant sources
- Digital platforms preferred
5. Ongoing Monitoring
- Continuous deforestation verification
- Satellite-based monitoring
- Regular compliance audits
“He who plays the piper dictates the tune. If the EU is our primary market, compliance becomes a business decision.”
— Mr. Victor Ezenwa, NICERT
Technology Solutions: Food Sign & Clear Up
The webinar featured live demonstrations of integrated compliance platforms by Trace X, NICERT’s technology partner:
Food Sign (First-Mile Traceability)
- Farmer registration with unique ID generation
- Walk-and-plot farm mapping via mobile devices
- Harvest and inventory tracking
- Custom reporting and dashboards
Clear Up (Compliance & Risk)
- GeoJSON upload with deforestation risk scoring
- Automated Due Diligence Statements (DDS)
- Customer transparency portal for EU buyers
- Real-time satellite monitoring
These platforms create a farm-to-export compliance pipeline that reduces manual intervention, supports real-time risk monitoring, and meets EU regulatory standards.
Nigeria’s Current Compliance Gaps
Six critical weaknesses were identified:
- Incomplete farm mapping – Missing GPS plot data across major cocoa states
- Poor traceability – Mixed sourcing at village and aggregator levels
- Weak documentation – Limited record-keeping at farm level
- Low farmer awareness – Significant knowledge gaps on EUDR requirements
- Absence of standardized risk assessment – No uniform procedures
- Inconsistent legality verification – Variations across states
These gaps represent urgent intervention points for both government and private sector actors.
Strategic Implications
Risks of Non-Compliance
- Exclusion from €1.5B EU cocoa market
- Revenue decline and competitive displacement
- Reputational damage
- Supply chain fragmentation
- Loss of EU buyer relationships
Opportunities from Compliance
- Scarcity premiums as competitors exit
- Carbon credit monetization
- Access to green finance
- Data-driven sector reform
- Stronger EU investment alignment
“The clock is ticking. Compliance is no longer optional. It’s the green passport for Nigerian cocoa.”
— Mr. Victor Ezenwa, NICERT
Recommendations
For Government
- Finalize national cocoa traceability framework
- Establish central national traceability database
- Support satellite mapping partnerships
- Deploy farmer awareness programs
- Accelerate national task force outputs
For Private Sector
- Adopt digital traceability platforms immediately
- Aggregate farmer data at cooperative level
- Explore carbon credit frameworks
- Engage with EUNAP for EU buyer matchmaking
- Invest in supply chain transparency
For Farmers & Cooperatives
- Begin farm registration and GPS mapping
- Participate in cooperative aggregation initiatives
- Attend EUDR awareness training
- Maintain proper farm records
- Connect with certified aggregators
How to Get Started with EUDR Compliance
For Exporters
- Register with EUNAP Trade Directory
- Contact NICERT or certified compliance providers
- Begin farm mapping and data collection
- Implement digital traceability platforms
- Access EU funding through BOI/FCMB channels
For Farmers
- Join recognized cooperatives or associations
- Participate in GPS mapping exercises
- Maintain farm activity records
- Engage with extension officers and training programs
- Document land tenure status
For Service Providers
- Partner with EUNAP for capacity building
- Obtain EUDR compliance certifications
- Deploy approved traceability technologies
- Support smallholder aggregation models
- Access EU technical assistance programs
Conclusion
The 10th Edition EUNAP Information Webinar delivered a clear message: EUDR compliance is operational, the compliance clock is running, and the window for action is narrowing.
With €1.5 billion in annual export value at stake, the cost of inaction far exceeds the investment required to build a compliant, traceable, and sustainable cocoa supply chain. The webinar demonstrated that:
- Practical solutions exist (Food Sign, Clear Up platforms)
- EU funding is available (€208 million committed)
- Government is mobilizing (national task force active)
- But coordination, speed, and execution are now decisive
Nigeria must transition from awareness to structured implementation to protect its European market position and leverage EUDR compliance as a platform for sustainable transformation.
